A Tale of Two Gibsons

Kyle Gibson was lights out Wednesday night as he held the Mariners scoreless over six innings. He scattered seven hits, but only walked one while striking out three to turn in his 8th dominant performance on the year, improving his overall record to eight wins and seven losses.

The problem is, there doesn’t seem to be any middle ground when it comes to Gibson’s starts. Either he’s lights out, like he was in Seattle (6.0IP, 7H, 0ER, 1BB, 3K) or he’s knocked out, like his outing against the Yankees on July 4th (2.0 IP, 6H, 5ER, 1BB, 0K).

One or two starts with such a variance wouldn’t mean much. Starters have bad outings, as even staff ace Phil Hughes has thrown a clunker or two this season. Gibson, however, isn’t just having one or two all or nothing starts. Seemingly every start is defined by the all-or-nothing principal.

Take a look at this years' splits:

(A blank space in the charts below indicates a value of zero).

Split

G

PA

AB

R

H

2B

3B

HR

SB

CS

BB

SO

SO/W

BA

OBP

SLG

OPS

TB

GDP

HBP

SH

SF

IBB

ROE

BAbip

tOPS+

sOPS+

in Wins

8

216

198

5

41

5

1

1

17

28

1.65

.207

.270

.247

.517

49

8

1

3

.237

58

85

in Losses

7

136

124

40

47

11

2

5

1

9

12

1.33

.379

.419

.621

1.040

77

5

1

2

2

.385

213

125

in No Dec.

3

71

68

10

3

2

1

3

13

4.33

.147

.183

.191

.374

13

2

1

.182

14

9

That’s a startling difference. He’s essentially allowing opposing batters to hit 170 points higher in average in losses while also seeing opponents' OPS double (!) Obviously, in a loss, starters are going to post worse numbers than they do in wins, but the splits are not typically this wide or dramatic.

Initially it looked like Gibson’s struggles were attributable to home/road splits. In his home starts since the beginning of the season, Gibson has had only two "clunkers"

Home Starts:

Date

Innings

Earned Runs

4/11

6.1

1

4/17

8.0

4/30

6.2

5

5/16

7.0

1

5/28

6.0

6/7

7.0

7/4

2.0

5

His road starts have been a bit rougher:

Road Starts:

Date

Innings

Earned Runs

4/5

5.0

1

4/22

3.0

7

5/5

7.0

5/10

2.0

6

5/23

5.0

5

6/2

6.0

4

6/13

7.0

6/18

7.0

6/24

2.0

7

6/29

8.0

2

7/9

6.0

Early in the season, the solution seemed simple. For whatever reason, Kyle Gibson struggled away from Target Field. However, Gibson’s last few starts have made that assessment inaccurate. He’s turned in quality outings in Texas, Boston and Detroit while his last dud came at home.

It’s clearly not as simple as home/road struggles. So, let’s dig a bit deeper. Maybe this is all just a matter of pitch selection?

Date

Opp

FB%

FBv

SL%

SLv

CB%

CBv

CH%

CHv

7/9/2014

@SEA

7/4/2014

NYY

57.70%

90.9

23.10%

83.7

3.90%

79

15.40%

83.3

6/29/2014

@TEX

67.40%

92.2

24.20%

85.5

2.10%

80.5

6.30%

84.5

6/24/2014

@LAA

62.00%

92.6

20.00%

85

2.00%

82

16.00%

84.1

6/18/2014

@BOS

56.90%

92.1

20.60%

84.9

3.90%

81

18.60%

84.1

6/13/2014

@DET

60.00%

91.5

24.60%

83.9

2.70%

78.3

12.70%

82.5

6/7/2014

HOU

65.10%

89.9

18.90%

83.8

2.80%

77.3

13.20%

82.1

6/2/2014

@MIL

62.30%

92.1

31.20%

84.3

2.60%

79

3.90%

83.3

5/28/2014

TEX

67.30%

91.5

20.60%

84.7

5.60%

79.7

6.50%

82.7

5/23/2014

@SFG

51.40%

92

26.40%

85.5

9.70%

81

12.50%

83.8

5/16/2014

SEA

68.80%

90.9

12.50%

84.1

1.00%

78

17.70%

83.2

5/10/2014

@DET

56.30%

91.7

33.30%

84.6

10.40%

83.2

5/5/2014

@CLE

69.00%

90.5

7.00%

85.6

7.00%

79.4

17.00%

82.7

4/30/2014

LAD

64.40%

91

19.80%

82.4

3.00%

79

12.90%

83.2

4/22/2014

@TBR

68.60%

90.8

24.40%

82.9

7.00%

82.7

4/17/2014

TOR

80.00%

90.9

11.40%

83.7

8.60%

82.9

4/11/2014

KCR

67.00%

91.3

19.00%

83.2

3.00%

78.7

11.00%

83

4/5/2014

@CLE

69.10%

90.4

13.40%

82

17.50%

81.8

That big block of data does have some interesting points. Mainly, in wins, Gibson is using his fastball between 60%-70% of the time while in losses the fastball usage resides at 51%-57%. Why is Gibson shying away from his fastball in losses? It looks like he’s struggling to locate the pitch.

Here’s Gibson’s Pitch F/X data from his 7/4 start against the Yankees:

Look at the gray squares, which indicate Gibson’s sinker. As you can see, Gibson struggled to locate his sinker, leaving many balls out of the zone. That caused him to fall behind and then have to come into the zone with a different pitch (since his sinker control was off) – thus resulting in a fireworks performance courtesy of the Yankee bats.

A majority of his sinkers are low in the zone and are grouped nicely. Greater control yielded a better result.

Admittedly, that’s a lot of data to comb over to simply reach the conclusion that Gibson is better when he can control his pitches. That policy applies to every starter in the league, outside of maybe Sam Deduno who in fact may be better when he has no idea where the ball is going. What’s startling is just how different the results are when Gibson is struggling with control and when he’s on.

Every starter will battle control issues from time to time and even the best starters get knocked around a bit, but I don’t know that I’ve ever seen a player as all or nothing as Kyle Gibson. Hopefully, Gibson can improve on these results as he continues to learn and grow. He’ll need to learn how to pitch when his best stuff just isn’t with him – even Kevin Correia and Ricky Nolasco can turn in quality outings when their command is evading them.

It seems like Gibson’s struggles may simply be because he hasn’t figured out how to work with what he has on any given night. We hope that as he pitches further into the season, he’ll figure things out and we’ll stop seeing so many "boom or busts" starts from the Twins’ righty.